Child-headed Households in Rural Zimbabwe: Perceptions of Shona Orphaned Children
This qualitative ethnographic case study explored the phenomenon of Child- Headed Households (CHHs) in rural Zimbabwe from the perspectives of a Shona community.
This qualitative ethnographic case study explored the phenomenon of Child- Headed Households (CHHs) in rural Zimbabwe from the perspectives of a Shona community.
This paper analyses the role of community-based child protection structures for the survival and development of orphans and vulnerable children.
In this article, the authors explore whether current relational health (connectedness) promotes positive outcomes for child welfare-involved youth while controlling for developmental risk (history of adverse, and lack of relationally positive, experiences).
This study explores how the social workers and the families cope with the paradox of constrained help and enter into some form of collaboration.
This paper seeks to contribute to debates about how people's adult lives unfold after experiencing childhood adversity. It presents analysis from the British Chinese Adoption Study: a mixed methods follow-up study of women, now aged in their 40s and early 50s, who spent their infant lives in Hong Kong orphanages and were then adopted by families in the UK in the 1960s.
This paper summarises the main concepts behind Childonomics and presents the key findings so far.
This study presents findings from the first known population-based estimation of separation in an emergency setting.
This document provides a brief summary of the field testing of the population-based estimation method (or ‘estimation method’) in North Kivu in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).
This pilot summary document provides a brief summary of the field testing of the community-based surveillance method in North Kivu in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).
On September 24, 2015, the CPC Learning Network hosted a webinar about measuring the separation of children from their families in emergency settings.